The Oban Times

Live-saving air ambulance charity marks anniversar­y

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Scotland’s Charity Air Ambulance (SCAA) marked its tenth anniversar­y on Monday May 22 by reflecting on a decade of life-saving service to communitie­s in every corner of Scotland.

Since May 22 2013, the charity has responded to nearly 5,000 call outs, raised more than £50 million and flown nearly half a million miles, saving thousands of lives and impacting on thousands more, particular­ly in remote and rural areas.

In 10 years, the charity has grown from a one aircraft service at Perth to a two-helicopter fleet based at Perth and Aberdeen, with two rapid response vehicles also responding to emergencie­s. It has more than doubled crew numbers, extended its operationa­l hours, developed its workforce and built an army of nearly 200 volunteers nationwide. SCAA’s first mission was to airlift Tricia Mackenzie, seriously injured when her car swerved to avoid a deer and left the road near Dunoon on May 23 2013. The aircraft’s arrival turned a two-hour road trip to hospital into a 12-minute mercy flight.

Crews are now responding to an average of three emergencie­s a day, sometimes as many as 12, with Tricia’s words from 10 years ago proving prophetic.

“SCAA is a brilliant addition to Scotland’s life-saving resources and I have nothing but praise for the pilots and paramedics who crew it,” she said at the time.

“This helicopter amazing team will and save a its lot of lives in Scotland and I’m so glad they were there for me during what was a terrifying experience.”

SCAA is fully integrated into the 999 emergency response network, deployed by the Scottish Ambulance Service special services desk to serious illness and injury anywhere in Scotland and its islands. A vital part of the country’s chain of critical interventi­ons, SCAA receives no government funding and is supported by public donations.

SCAA chief executive officer David Craig reflected on the efforts of everyone who has played a part in the charity’s growth and success story over the past decade.

“From the visionarie­s who turned an idea into reality; the frontline crews who work tirelessly to fly paramedic and critical doctor-led teams to emergencie­s; our trustees who govern the charity; the charity team which promotes and delivers activities; the volunteers who help maintain a public profile, to the businesses, trusts, foundation­s, organisati­ons and individual­s whose never-failing generosity has sustained our service even through the most challengin­g times, the country owes them all a huge debt of gratitude,” he said. “As we mark our 10-year entirely milestone, we thank everyone involved in ensuring those most seriously ill or injured have paramedic or doctor attention as quickly as possible and are airlifted to advanced hospital care in the fastest possible time,” added Mr Craig.

SCAA was shocked by the sudden death of its chairman John Bullough earlier this month and Mr Craig dedicated the charity’s milestone anniversar­y to his memory.

“John was one of the visionarie­s behind the charity and he would be first to recognise the contributi­on of all those involved during our first decade,” he said. “He always described SCAA as ‘The People’s Helicopter’, funded by the people of Scotland, for the people of Scotland and we will continue that legacy, with the public’s support, into the future.”

 ?? Photograph: Graeme Hart/Perthshire Picture Agency. ?? Scotland’s Charity Air Ambulance (SCAA) marked its tenth anniversar­y on Monday May 22. Left to right: day duty crew - lead paramedic John Pritchard, pilot Captain Russell Myles and paramedic Ali Daw.
Photograph: Graeme Hart/Perthshire Picture Agency. Scotland’s Charity Air Ambulance (SCAA) marked its tenth anniversar­y on Monday May 22. Left to right: day duty crew - lead paramedic John Pritchard, pilot Captain Russell Myles and paramedic Ali Daw.

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